Stem Cells Stimulated to Be Sperm

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Stem Cells Stimulated to Be Sperm

Embryonic stem cells have been encouraged to grow into sperm cells for the first time, Japanese scientists report.

The work is very preliminary, and was done in the laboratory with mouse stem cells. The next step would be to see if it can be repeated in live animals.

Stem cells are the basic building blocks of animals, forming in the new embryo and later developing into the various organs and tissues as the fetus grows.

Researchers have grown stem cells into many other types of cells, including egg cells, but this is the first time a sperm cell has been developed, the scientists said.

The work was headed by Toshiaki Noce of Mitsubishi Kagaku Institute of Life Science in Japan. The results are reported in this week's online issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.

Noce and his team incubated the stem cells with other cells that produce a protein called BMP4, which is known to stimulate formation of sperm cells during the development of an embryo. In their laboratory, some of the stem cells began developing into sperm cells within one day, a process that takes three days in the embryo.

Bert Vogelstein, a professor at Johns Hopkins University who headed a National Academy of Science panel on stem cells, said the work is "novel and provides a wonderful example of how new technologies can provide diverse cell types in the test tube that may prove useful for biomedical applications in the future."

Growing stem cells into other tissues has been hailed as a source of major potential therapies in the future. However, the process is controversial because many stem cells are harvested from discarded embryos.

The Bush administration has limited federal funding for stem-cell research to lines of cells that already exist, although new stem-cell lines can be developed using private funds and in some other countries.